|
Analog Science Fiction and Fact magazine
Analog Science Fiction and Fact magazine features modern science fiction, science fact and fantasy stories and book reviews. The pages of this magazine have been home to many of science fiction's foremost writers and stories. Isaac Asimov, Robert A. Heinlein, Poul Anderson, Spider Robinson, Lois McMaster Bujold, and Michael F. Flynn are just a few of the prominent names which have often appeared in Analog, and it has a long tradition of discovering and cultivating new talent. Each issue mixes fascinating...
|
$23
See 4 Stores
See All Stores
|
|
Analog Science Fiction and Fact
|
$13
See 18 Stores
See All Stores
|
|
Nebula Award finalist "The Astronaut from Wyoming" by Adam-Troy Castro and Jerry Oltion is about a boy with a birth defect that makes him look like a tabloid alien, but who nevertheless wants to be an astronaut.
|
|
|
ONLY ON SALE UNTIL JUNE 30, 2004"Time Ablaze," by Michael A. Burstein, our lead novella and cover story for June, commemorates the 100th anniversary of a real but largely forgotten event. Before 9/11/01, the fire that destroyed the steamboat General Slocum was the worst disaster in the history of New York City, claiming approximately a thousand lives. Historians, of course, like to make past events as real as possible, and future science and technology may provide new ways to do that. But when you...
|
|
|
Analog Science Fiction And Fact Magazine Subscription
We think you'll love the quality and price of Analog Science Fiction And Fact. If you are ever not 100% satisfied with your order, you may cancel anytime and receive a refund for any unserved issues. Analog Science Fiction And Fact Magazine
|
$22
See 18 Stores
See All Stores
|
|
Analog Science Fiction and Fact began as Astounding Stories of Super-Science in 1930, and has continuously published the vanguard of SF with an emphasis on science--helping to launch the careers of such luminaries as Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Anne McCaffrey, and Orson Scott Card, to name a few. This subscription includes a whole year's set of eBook issues: eight monthly single issues (regular newsstand price $3.99) and two double-issues--January/Februar y and July/August (regular...
|
|
|
eBook Description: Our July/August "double" issue features two big stories. The cover is for "Seed of Revolution," the latest and possibly the best of Daniel Hatch's series about Chamal, the world where evolution works very differently than it does on Earth. (No, it doesn't matter if you haven't read the earlier stories; in fact, you may get a clearer understanding of Chamal's bizarre biology from this story than from any of its predecessors.) The differences necessarily color the way its inhabitants...
|
|
|
In the science fact department, astronomer Kevin Walsh returns with another of his looks at the ever-expanding diversity of planets that we're finally learning exist--or could exist--out there. This time his topic is "Ribbonland," a kind of world long favored by science fiction writers on which habitability is confined to one or more bands of latitude. Just how habitable would those be, and what surprises might they have up their metaphorical sleeves? Read our April issue and find out....
|
|
|
Description: Our July/August "double" issue features two big stories. The cover is for "Seed of Revolution," the latest and possibly the best of Daniel Hatch's series about Chamal, the world where evolution works very differently than it does on Earth. (No, it doesn't matter if you haven't read the earlier stories; in fact, you may get a clearer understanding of Chamal's bizarre biology from this story than from any of its predecessors.) The differences necessarily color the way its inhabitants look...
|
|
|
eBook Description: Adam-Troy Castro is back in our May issue with "Among the Tchi," a sneaky bit of satire that I suspect will ring a bell with lots of readers. It has a great variety of company, with stories by Tom Ligon, Alexis Glynn Latner, Robert R. Chase, Shane Tourtellotte, and Steven Gould featuring an invigorating mix of adventure, alien worlds, and a touch of romance, among other things--always including, above all, imagination and thought-provoking entertainment.
|
|
|
As usual, the fiction covers quite a bit of ground, including an alternate history in which Galileo Galilei is psychoanalyzed and "helped" by a chap with a suspicious resemblance to Sigmund Freud--told, not surprisingly, by Harry Turtledove. Donald Moffitt also ventures into the past with a time-traveling art dealer who hopes to get in on the ground floor with one of the Old Dutch Masters. And we'll have a broad spectrum of stories by Stephen L. Burns, Howard V. Hendrix, Richard A. Lovett, and whoever...
|
|
|
Description: Adam-Troy Castro is back in our May issue with "Among the Tchi," a sneaky bit of satire that I suspect will ring a bell with lots of readers. It has a great variety of company, with stories by Tom Ligon, Alexis Glynn Latner, Robert R. Chase, Shane Tourtellotte, and Steven Gould featuring an invigorating mix of adventure, alien worlds, and a touch of romance, among other things--always including, above all, imagination and thought-provoking entertainment.
|
|
|
The pages of this magazine have been home to many of science fiction's foremost writers and stories. Each issue mixes fascinating stories about real people in p... See the full description of Analog Science Fiction and Fact
|
|
|
Richard A. Lovett supplies the science fact article, "From Atlantis to Canoe-Eating Trees: Geomythology Comes of Age." Ideally science relies on careful observation, measurement, and (whenever possible) controlled experiments. But at the scales of prehistory, planetology, and astronomy, some of the most interesting phenomena are out of reach for direct observation and experiment, yet strongly hinted at by folklore and ancient writings. By themselves, those are not science--but they can suggest the...
|
|
|
David A. Hardy's spectacular December cover illustrates a story as hard to capture in a single image as it was to imagine in the first place: "Formidable Caress," the latest of Stephen Baxter's "Tales of Old Earth." Old Earth, you may remember (though you don't have to) is a most peculiar place where time is layered, running at different rates at different altitudes. That's what makes it possible to experience a drama on such a colossal scale that it would at first seem intrinsically beyond the scope...
|
|
|
Description: Our October issue starts with a bang, with a Bob Eggleton cover for Michael F. Flynn's novella, "Where the Winds Are All Asleep," a unique and literally deep adventure story. You may think our world has been thoroughly explored, and indeed our knowledge of it has been growing by leaps and bounds. Can it still hold surprises? The answer may be right under your feet, and far bigger (and scarier) than you'd guess.
|
|
|
Description: Analog Science Fiction and Fact began as Astounding Stories of Super-Science in 1930, and has continuously published the vanguard of SF with an emphasis on science--helping to launch the careers of such luminaries as Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Anne McCaffrey, and Orson Scott Card, to name a few. This subscription includes a whole year's set of eBook issues: eight monthly single issues (regular newsstand price $3.99) and two double-issues--January/Februar y and July...
|
|
|
eBook Description: Analog Science Fiction and Fact began as Astounding Stories of Super-Science in 1930, and has continuously published the vanguard of SF with an emphasis on science--helping to launch the careers of such luminaries as Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, Frank Herbert, Anne McCaffrey, and Orson Scott Card, to name a few. This subscription includes a whole year's set of eBook issues: eight monthly single issues (regular newsstand price $3.99) and two double-issues--January/Februar y and...
|
|